The former 'Mad Men' actress talks about her experiences in the entertainment industry, saying there were people who tried to take advantage of her on the sets.

AceShowbiz - Christina Hendricks has experienced people trying "to take advantage" of her on movie sets but still defended the entertainment industry as being no worse than other businesses.

The "Mad Men" star has stressed she was never treated inappropriately on the set of the acclaimed AMC period drama series - which ran from 2007 until 2015 - but has claimed people have tried to "persuade" her, "coerce" her, and "professionally shame" her in other projects.

Christina explained, "Boy, do you think anyone in the entertainment industry comes out unscathed and not objectified? I don't know one musician or one model or one actor who has escaped that. I have had moments - not on 'Mad Men'; on other things - where people have tried to take advantage of me, use my body in a way I wasn't comfortable with, persuade me or coerce me or professionally shame me: 'If you took your work seriously, you would do this …' "

"Maybe it was my modelling background, but I knew to immediately get on the phone and go: 'Uh oh, trouble.' That's where it's very much a job. We need to talk to the producers and handle this professionally."

And although the 46-year-old has experienced misconduct in the workplace, she defended "Mad Men" creator Matthew Weiner after one of the writers on the show, Kater Gordon, accused him of sexual harassment, and consulting producer Marti Noxon said he created a toxic environment on set.

She added, "My relationship with Matt was in no way toxic. I don't discount anyone's experience if I wasn't there to see it, but that wasn't my experience."

"Was he a perfectionist, was he tough, did he expect a lot? Yes. And he would say that in a second. We were hard on each other."

The actress also defended Hollywood after hundreds of people came forward at the height of the #MeToo movement to accuse several executives and stars of sexual harassment and misconduct, insisting Hollywood is no worse than any other career path when it comes to inappropriate behaviour.

Speaking to The Guardian newspaper, she said, "It gets a lot of attention because people know who we are. I'm sure there's a casting couch at the bank down the street, I'm sure the same thing happens in management consultancy, but people don't know who the management consultants are."

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